Ferries were initially built to service offshore oil and gas rigs in the Gulf of Mexico.

Steamship Ferries Set to Launch in March

The M/V Aquinnah and M/V Barnstable have spent more than nine months at a shipyard in Mobile, Ala., transforming from offshore energy tenders to Steamship Authority freight ferries that can also carry passengers and cars.

Two new additions to the Steamship Authority fleet are expected to be in the water by the end of March, director of marine operations Mark Amundsen said this week.

“We are progressing for a March 29 launch, and that is a hard date with the Alabama Shipyard,” Mr. Amundsen told the Steamship Authority board of governors Tuesday morning.

The two identical boats, M/V Aquinnah and M/V Barnstable, have spent more than nine months at the shipyard in Mobile, Ala., where Mr. Amundsen has been overseeing their conversion from offshore energy tenders to Steamship Authority freight ferries that can also carry passengers and cars.

A third sister ship, M/V Monomoy, is berthed in Houma, La., awaiting its turn for conversion.

Aquinnah and Barnstable will remain quayside in Mobile for the final touches of shipyard work, Mr. Amundsen said. Their new captains and crews will then take the ferries north to New England for training and inspections before the Steamship Authority’s summer season.

The captains are already in Mobile, familiarizing themselves with the new boats, and chief engineers will soon be joining them, Mr. Amundsen said

“We’ll be going to Houma next week, to the Monomoy, just for some training,” he said.

The Steamship Authority paid almost $16 million in bond proceeds and grant funding to buy the three vessels in 2022, from a Louisiana company that had built them less than 15 years earlier to service offshore oil and gas rigs in the Gulf of Mexico. The costs of converting the boats to freight ferries, initially estimated at about $8 million apiece, skyrocketed in 2023, when only two bids came in after more than two dozen shipyards had expressed interest in doing the work.

The Steamship Authority wound up extending its timeline and negotiating with Alabama Shipyard in order to lower the conversion budget from about $20 million a boat to $27 million in total for the Aquinnah and Barnstable together, reserving the Monomoy for the time being.

Alabama Shipyard pulled the two forerunners out of the water last spring, for work that included replacing a 24-foot-long, 110-ton midsection of each boat in order to add flotation and make other changes required by U.S. Coast Guard safety regulations for carrying passengers.

At its meeting Tuesday, the Steamship Authority board approved ordering about $400,000 worth of shore-based spare parts for the new freight boats. The clutches, pumps, bearings, electrical parts and other components can be used by either the Aquinnah or the Barnstable, as well as aboard the Monomoy after its conversion.

“I absolutely love this. One order and you’re servicing three ships,” board chair Robert Jones said.

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 02/21/2024 - 12:24

Permalink

James Oak Bluffs

“I absolutely love this. One order and you’re servicing three ships,” Imagine that!!!!
NOW Start Buying Commuter Fast Ferries

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 02/21/2024 - 18:57

Permalink

Brenda Leonard Oak Bluffs

About time they will be replacing the Island (broken down) Home.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 02/22/2024 - 20:10

Permalink

Lesley Allen Falmouth

The traffic in Falmouth to/from to MV is already a nightmare, not just cars- all the gas, freight trucks and Amazon delivery trucks. If you all on MV think you are "green" - YOU ARE NOT!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 02/23/2024 - 00:51

Permalink

Tom Engley West Tisbury

Lesley Allen is correct it’s an embarrassment to see all the trucks come off the boats. All kinds of building materials instant lawn instant forests. Truck after truck of lumber. Huge cranes I saw one up-island today. Green we are not unless you’re talking about money and greed. God save Martha’s Vineyard or a direct hit by a Cat 5 hurricane. We lost site of our values decades ago. Too bad.

George. Curme Roanoke

George Curme, Jr.an island principal land owner and died in June 1976 @ his home on East Chop often observed nothing is constant save change. A wiser man I never knew

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 02/23/2024 - 09:44

Permalink

Frances Rokicki Bolton, Ct

We sold my husband’s family home in Oak Bluffs, 35 years ago. We visited the island last July. It definitely has become more corporate, many small businesses are gone! Fligors, bike rentals, etc. But Gay Head, still beautiful and the salt air was welcomed!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 02/23/2024 - 10:22

Permalink

Frank Brunelle Beach Road

Dec 24, 1979 — The steamship authority had requested permission to build a second ferry slip in Vineyard Haven while the original slip was being replaced.

NY Times aeticle

There was a tremendous battle and finally the SSA agreed that the second slip would be only used if the original slip was damaged. The fear was that MV sould be overrun with tourism, traffic, and we would lose our special place on the planet as a laid back idyllic nature loving place.

Such idealism. It all reverts to that decision.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 02/23/2024 - 19:22

Permalink

JayEff Edgartown

This says that we can expect MORE traffic on the island in summer. Doesn't matter if it's trucks or cars. We need some way to cap the number of vehicles that come to MV. SSA advertises for people make a reservation and jump on. We can't do that. Summertime traffic is now greater than any reasonable level. Do a poll, and #1 complaint will be the traffic level. Then create a cap, and do it soon.

Michael edgartown

so, you want less tourism. less vacation rentals. tourism is your economy. you kill that, many livelihoods are gone. I have proof. my rentals in august are gone. no more. the reason, they are sick of the ferry, high cost of lousy restaurants, no place for kids, and general dislike of locals....maine and jersey shore are there destinations now....maybe you have a trust fund, and are well off, but others are hurting

gina Menemsha/nyc

The Tourism business is competitive .. Tourists want value for their limited time & vacation $$$. MV has been losing it's overall appeal to justify the prices charged for everything .. You are seeing that backlash when a family can go to IE Wellfleet, Chatham or other Cape areas & not feel gouged not to mention areas that are actually nicer with public access & skip the ferry..hassle/expense . & did I mention the insane summer traffic ?? just saying ..

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 02/24/2024 - 12:10

Permalink

Ken Rusczyk OB

Yep, that's the ticket! We need more cars and trucks on the Vineyard.SSA, you make us proud.

Add new comment

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and email addresses turn into links automatically.